Memory
Critical Thinking and Problem Solving
Intelligence
Intelligence Testing
Language
100

A unique and highly emotional moment can give rise to clear, strong, and persistent memory

What is a flashbulb memory?

100

A process that involves knowing, understanding, remembering, and communicating

What is thinking (or cognition)

100

Intelligence that is linked to many clusters and can be analyzed by factor analysis to create a single underlining aspect of intelligence.

What is general intelligence (g)?

100

Measures overall intelligence – consists of 2 parts, verbal and performance

What is the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale?

100

The smallest distinctive sound unit in a spoken language.

What is phonemes?

200

information is retrieved and manipulated & maintained through rehearsal (instead of simpler ST memory).

What is working memory?

200

Methodical, logical rule or procedure that guarantees solving a particular problem

What is an algorithm?

200

9 different forms of intelligence, each relatively independent of the others

What is Gardner's Multiple Intelligences?

200

Commissioned by the French government to design a “test” to identify French children who would have problems in regular classes.

Who is Alfred Binet?

200

The smallest unit that carries meaning may be a word or a part of a word

What is morphemes?

300

When your recall is better for what other people say but poor for a person just before you in line.

What is the next-in-line effect?

300

Simple thinking strategies that often allows us to make judgments and solve problems efficiently.

What is a heuristic?

300

A set of skills that underlie the accurate assessment, evaluation, expression and regulation of emotions.

What is emotional intelligence (EQ)?

300

Intended to predict your ability to learn a new skill - how well you could do (ACT/SAT)

What is an aptitude test?

300

The rules for combining words into grammatically sensible sentences.

What is Syntax?

400

Intention or conscious recollection of information…you are deliberately trying to remember something

What is Explicit Memory?

400

Tendency to think of only the familiar or typical functions for objects

What is functional fixedness?

400

Ability to decipher information and make decisions (especially in new situations), which is more difficult at an old age, so it decreases as we age (past middle adulthood).

What is fluid intelligence?

400

A test that yields consistent results

What is reliability?

400

Language development can be explained on the basis of learning principles, such as association, imitation and reinforcement.

What is Skinner's Language Acquisition Theory?

500

When old information interferes with (blocks) the retrieval of new information

What is proactive interference?

500

How an issue is presented can significantly affect decisions and justments

What is framing?

500

When someone has an extremely high ability in one specific area accompanied by significant delays or deficits in other areas of intelligence.

What is Savant Syndrome?

500

Refers to the extent a test measures a particular behavior or trait.

What is content validity?

500

A neural system of the brain for understanding language that is switched on by exposure to language in our environment

What is Chomsky's Language Acquisition Device?